Originally, I was drawn to the "ancient China steampunk" setting, but the most unique aspects of the steampunk in this story (the capacities of "iron puppet" robots, and "violet gold" as a commodity) end up influencing the story very little in the end. Another appeal is that, as a "light novel" published in little bites online, the series meticulously explains every plot detail, which is useful to a novice reader of military novels and political dramas. Having found Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn difficult, and The Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee impossible, a light novel is as good as it gets for me. Yet, the characters' emotional lives, if you can call it that, were written in this overexplicated style as well, which had the effect of being super corny - especially since I didn't really find any reason to love the characters other than them being superficially humorous.
To compare Stars of Chaos to the last "light novel" I read, The Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu, might not be fair, since the latter has a TV show and a super-fun accompanying soundtrack. But note, despite their similarities in setting and tone, how TGDC deals with more philosophical and interesting themes - how does a person come to be evil when society deems them as evil? What does evil even mean? - while SoC deals with, bluntly, the steps Chang Geng takes to lay the legal foundations of a stable empire. Do we find this question worth pondering?
I want to say that it was enjoyable enough to finish 5 books; I wanted to know what happened. The thing about romance novels or romance-centric novels, though, is that since the main couple is guaranteed to end up with a happy ending, a huge chunk of the mystery and suspense in the plot is just dead. I've never understood how readers don't see following these genre conventions, "being a romance novel", as not majorly detracting from the book. SoC is hardly romance-centric, but as you can tell by the cover, you know what happens. And given the length of the series, you also know by when it will happen. Between this series and The Darkness Outside Us by Elliot Schrefer, I'm still looking for a satisfying romanscifi. If such a book exists or could exist.
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